[Dixielandjazz] Another Dixieland Festival Gone

Dixiejazzdata dixiejazzdata at aol.com
Wed Oct 5 22:52:55 PDT 2011


And once again too little too late, simply because hard headed old timers refused to adapt to the ever changing world around them, and be a part of it and educate new generations to their kind of music in a relevant way to entice them into liking it thru sheer exposure.  The Older farts have no one to blame but themselves for not expanding the marketplace for Their Kind of music.  Now it will be up to the kids of today to discover it and preserve it properly, since so many OKOM Preachers failed miserably while only preaching to their membership choirs who are now mostly dead and gone.

Rest assured it will however survive in spite of you and be discovered and embraced by generations to come, with far less critical attitudes about it.

Sadly

Bart.

 




Another Dixieland Festival virtually gone. I played there with Pete  
Pepke in a band about 16 years ago. Glad to see that Wally's Warehouse  
Waifs and Sister Swing are there and visiting 32 elementary schools  
with a learning program.

Cheers,
Steve Barbone
www.myspace.com/barbonestreetjazzband




October 05, 2011

By John Darling
for the Mail Tribune - Southern Oregon's News Source.


Psst. The Medford Jazz Festival is not about Dixieland anymore — or  
really about jazz — although both still are included in the fun and  
venerable 23-year-old event.

The festival is really about all kinds of music, from blues,  
rockabilly and 1950s rock to Western swing, zydeco and jump jive, with  
lots of dancing thrown in.

About half the people who attend the festival, held at three spots in  
downtown Medford with food and full bars, have been out-of-towners.  
That suggests to organizers that locals have a "perception problem"  
that the event is still about straw hats and Dixieland, as it was in  
the beginning, said festival director Dennis Ramsden.

"We've got to pick up the younger people," he notes. "It should be  
called a music festival, not a jazz festival. Too many people say, 'I  
don't like jazz,' and they don't come. I was like that for 10 years. I  
had no idea what it was and how much fun it is."

The festival's motto now is, "If you don't go, you'll never know,"  
says Ramsden, adding he'd like to see audiences in which half the  
people are under 60 and half over.

The Medford Jazz Festival is a nonprofit organization that benefits  
music education in Medford schools. Two of the bands, Wally's  
Warehouse Waifs and Sister Swing, this week are visiting 32 elementary  
schools in the area, teaching 15,000 students about music inspired by  
American culture.

Two groups in the festival are from the Rogue Valley: the Southern  
Oregon Jazz Orchestra, with swing, Latin and big-band sounds of the  
past; and the Mixers, a swing, jazz and West Coast jump blues band  
with sounds of the 1940s and 1950s but with "the revved-up attitude of  
today."

"The festival is all kinds of music under the umbrella of jazz," says  
Mark Stever of the Southern Oregon Jazz Orchestra. "We play a little  
jazz. It's music you can dance to, not the jazz you think of with  
every musician doing his own thing. Ours has more of an edge. It's  
jump blues, not the low-down, dirty blues. The average person should  
go to the festival because it's all genres."

This year's festival will include 14 bands, plus a number of dance  
options. Drew and Catherina from Eugene will teach the new rage, Lindy  
Hop, revived from the 1920s. Russ Bruner and Susan Kane from Portland  
will teach Lindy Hop, Charleston and Balboa styles.


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